| Felix Stalder on Mon, 3 May 2004 19:19:25 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> Transeuropean Picnic |
Transeuropean Picnic
Historic events are odd things, mostly disappointing. They feel either like
empty routines of calendarial arbitrariness (200 years French Revolution, the
millennium) or utterly imposed (9/11, war in Iraq). Either way, they usually
render one passive, through boredom or powerlessness. History, it seems, is
always made by others. The EU enlargement, somehow, doesn't really fit this
pattern, eventhough it had plenty of both in it.
Yet, it is also, or perhaps primarily, an unfinished event, one whose actual
meaning goes far beyond the "overcoming the divisions of the cold war" or any
other of the standard themes trotted out by celebratory speakers on market
squares across the continent. Its meaning, really, will only slowly emerge,
through the accumulation of everyday practice. The EU, after all, famously
lacks a vision.
How could such a practice look like from the point-of-view of open media
cultures? To think about this, kuda.org, together with v2, issued an
invitation to gather in Novi Sad, Serbia for a transeuropean pic-nic on the
weekend of the enlargement [1].
Of course, being in Serbia, one cannot help but be reminded that this great
process of unification is also a process of creating new boundaries, of
establishing new visa regimes, border controls and barriers to mobilities
(which my spell checker insists to render as 'nobilities'). Yet, bringing
together a hundred people from some 20 countries between the Netherland and
Georgia on a shoe-string budget and have them picnic on the porch of Tito's
hunting cabin in the midst of a pristine national park, one felt equally that
new possibilities were opening up, in the cracks of the major narrative.
This, as became more clear to me during the discussions, has to do with the
particular character of this thing, the EU, that is growing before our eyes.
Most importantly, the EU is not a state. It doesn't raise taxes, doesn't have
a military or a police force, doesn't create laws (only directives to be made
into laws at the national level), or issue passports. It doesn't even have a
sports team. Yet, it is also not a meaningless exercise of an out-of-control
bureaucracy issuing 'symbols' and creating well-intentioned but freefloating
'discourses'. Rather, the best way to think of the EU, it seems to me, is as
a gigantic coordination mechanism. It has a relatively small hub
('Brussels'), trying to get others nodes in a network -- some bigger, others
smaller than itself -- to behave in a way that things can flow between them
more easily. The enlargement just added a lot of nodes to this network. The
coordinating hub's main function is to issue pointers that help to direct
these massive material and immaterial flows.
The strange thing about these pointers is their consistency. They are hard and
soft at the same time. By directing flows, they create new pools of
opportunities, while draining others off their resources. For example, many
educational institutions in Europe are going through painfull restructuring
processes at the moment, not just because of funding problems, but because of
attempts to reorient themselves according to EU pointers ('Bologna reform')
hoping to then profit from the new opportunities created by the flows of
people, projects and money being pumped through a somewhat more standardized
European educational landscape. Of course, no institution is forced to do
that -- that's the soft part. However, not doing it will amount to a
self-marginalization virtually nobody is willing to accept -- that's the hard
part.
The EU, then, is a myriad of such circulation systems whose main power rests
on its ability to include or exclude nodes. The main difference between
inside and outside of a network is that opportunities are created exclusively
inside the network (through the circulation of flows of all kinds) whereas
outside, marginality is structurally re-enforced all the time (by being
bypassed).
The important thing is that the EU is not one but a myriad of circulation
systems. Many overlap and reinforce one another -- the enlargement is also a
process of accelerating such consolidation -- but the degree of overlap is
much smaller than in a traditional nation state (say, the US). And this, it
seems to me, is where independent cultural practices come in. They can
contribute that this consolidation of the patterns of inclusion / exclusion
do not become absolute. They can extend the networks to include nodes other
than the officially sanctioned ones, thus making sure that not only
opportunities flows beyond the borders (if there is one aspect of the EU that
is state-like, then it's the Schengen Treaty), but that new opportunities are
created precisely because the cultural micro-networks are different from the
official ones.
This is not an 'Anti-EU' strategy, which was made clear by many is picnickers
is luxury that only those who inside the EU can afford. Rather, it's a
question of creatively redirecting flows, something one can only do if one is
connected to them. The definition of what Europe is up for grabs, like it
hasn't been in a long time. This strikes me as the true meaning of the EU
enlargement. And if this 'new Europe' continues to include picnics in the
villas of former autocrats or plutocrats, there's definitively something to
look forward to.
[1] http://www.transeuropicnic.org/index.htm
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